中华人民共和国国家安全部 | |||||||
Ministry overview | |||||||
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Formed | 1 July 1983 | ||||||
Preceding agencies |
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Type | Constituent Department of the State Council | ||||||
Jurisdiction | People's Republic of China including Hong Kong and Macau | ||||||
Headquarters | Yidongyuan compound, No. 100 Xiyuan, Haidian, Beijing, China[1] 39°59′32″N 116°16′42″E / 39.9921°N 116.2783°E | ||||||
Motto | "Serve the people firmly and purely, reassure the party, be willing to contribute, be able to fight hard and win" | ||||||
Employees | 110,000 (estimated) | ||||||
Minister responsible | |||||||
Deputy Ministers responsible |
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Ministry executive |
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Parent organization | Central National Security Commission Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission | ||||||
Child ministry | |||||||
Website | www | ||||||
Footnotes | |||||||
Chinese name | |||||||
Simplified Chinese | 国家安全部 | ||||||
Traditional Chinese | 國家安全部 | ||||||
Literal meaning | State Security Ministry | ||||||
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The Ministry of State Security[a] (MSS) is the principal civilian intelligence, security and secret police agency of the People's Republic of China, responsible for foreign intelligence, counterintelligence, and the political security of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). One of the largest and most secretive intelligence organizations in the world, it is headquartered in Haidian, Beijing, with powerful semi-autonomous branches at the provincial, city, municipality and township levels throughout China.[1][2][3][4]
The origins of the MSS begin with the CCP's Central Special Branch, better known as the Teke, which was replaced by the Central Social Affairs Department (SAD) in 1936, which was in turn succeeded by the Central Investigation Department (CID) – the MSS's immediate predecessor – in 1955. In 1983 CID was merged with the counterintelligence elements of the Ministry of Public Security (MPS) to create the MSS.
The MSS is active in industrial and cyber espionage, where it has replaced the People's Liberation Army (PLA) as the country's most sophisticated and prolific advanced persistent threat actor.[5][6] It makes arrests through its own People's Police units and retains the authority to conduct extrajudicial court hearings.[7][8] The ministry has also been known to be involved in transnational repression, surveillance and harassment of dissidents abroad and influence operations targeting overseas Chinese diaspora in collaboration with the United Front Work Department. Today the agency is estimated to have at least 110,000 employees, with 10,000 directly attached to MSS headquarters and 100,000 spread across its dozens of provincial branches.
The MSS headquarters was located where the previous CID was, at No. 100 Xiyuan, a location with tight security in the western suburbs of Beijing
Dmitri Alperovitch said his firm is observing an increase in hacks by China's Ministry of State Security, which he says is far more adept and proficient than the People's Liberation Army, which previously had conducted most of the hacks into private Western companies. "That's troubling, because they've always been the better actor," he said.
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Like the MPS, the MSS has a wide scope of authority in domestic intelligence activities, and that authority overlaps with the law enforcement responsibilities of the MPS. Thus, the MSS not only is involved in police functions (similar to the U.S. FBI) but also fulfills other roles, such as court hearings (akin to the role of the judiciary in Western democracies).
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